Arkansas News

EV registrations soar more than 60% in Arkansas

by Jeff Della Rosa (JDellaRosa@nwabj.com)

Arkansas surpassed 50,000 electric vehicles registered for the first time in 2024, a state agency spokesman said. Total EV registrations jumped 61.57% to 58,387 in 2024 from 36,137 in 2023.

Scott Hardin, spokesman for the Arkansas Department of Finance and Administration, recently provided registration numbers for fully electric and hybrid electric vehicles registered in Arkansas. As of Dec. 31, the state had 9,214 fully electric and 49,173 hybrid electric vehicles registered.

“The state closed the second half of 2024 with strong EV registration totals, easily surpassing 50,000 total registered EVs (fully electric and hybrids) for the first time,” Hardin said. “We should reach 60,000 early this year.”

EV registrations soar more than 60% in Arkansas

Updated Weather Briefing from the National Weather Service

  • WHAT HAS CHANGED: The Flood Watch has been expanded to include portions of northern central Arkansas.

  • A strong storm system will approach the state from the southwest through the day today, and rainfall will become widespread from west to east across the area later this evening through Thursday.

  • As the system moves through, excessive rainfall is possible from southeast Oklahoma across portions of western and northern Arkansas, resulting in increasing flash flooding potential. Area rivers and basins are also expected to see an increase in streamflow, with some locations possibly reaching flooding levels.

  • Additionally, a few strong to severe thunderstorms are possible across mainly southern Arkansas Thursday afternoon and evening.

  • The threat for hazardous weather is expected to come to an end by Friday morning as the storm system moves east of the state.

The greatest probabilities for rainfall in excess of 3 inches currently lies across portions of western to central Arkansas, and primarily over the high terrain regions. A large probability exists for much of the northwestern half of the state to receive at least 2 inches of rainfall.

Heavy rain and severe weather possibilities for Arkansas this week

  • A strong storm system will approach the state from the southwest in the coming days.

  • Rain will become widespread from west to east across the area Wednesday evening through Thursday

  • As the system moves through, heavy rainfall is possible from southeast Oklahoma across portions of western and northern Arkansas.

  • Additionally, a few strong to severe thunderstorms are possible across mainly southern Arkansas Thursday afternoon and evening.

  • The threat for hazardous weather is expected to come to an end by Friday morning as the storm system moves east of the state.

Free school breakfast up for debate in Arkansas Legislature

KUAR | By Josie Lenora

On Monday, a legislative committee plans to discuss a bill to make breakfast free for all public school students in Arkansas.

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Perhaps the largest restaurant in the state of Arkansas is the Little Rock School District. Serving thousands of kids, breakfast and lunch, five days a week, nutritionist Stephanie Walker-Hynes says a lot of work goes into meal planning, because children, she says, “eat with their eyes.” The food has to look appealing.

“Because you don't want your tray to be bland,” she said. “You don't want to serve starchy vegetables all the time. And so we also want to make sure we have a variety and we are advancing the palate.”

Free school breakfast up for debate in Arkansas Legislature

Federal officials working to keep U.S. free of nightmarish screwworms

By Mary Hightower
U of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — The New World screwworm is the stuff of nightmares.

Named for its habit of screwing into the living flesh of warm-blooded animals with its razor-sharp mouth hooks, they are maggots — the larvae of Cochliomyia hominivorax, a fly with large orange eyes, a dark blue or green metallic body bearing three dark stripes.

Adult New World screwworm fly, characterized by its large orange eyes and bluish or greenish metallic body and three back stripes. (Image by  Judy Gallagher (lCreative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license)

All but disappeared from the United States since the 1960s, the New World screwworm has prompted fresh concerns from the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the livestock industry after a case was reported in southern Mexico last fall.

This prompted the USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, or APHIS, to put in effect a temporary ban on importation of live cattle, bison, horses and other livestock from Mexico.

“The United States Department of Agriculture had successfully eradicated New World screwworm from the U.S. in 1966,” said Kirsten Midkiff, extension animal health and wellbeing specialist for the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture. “The last case that we had in the U.S. was in October 2016 in Florida, and swift action was taken to eliminate the presence by March 2017.

“Because of this new case in the southern part of Mexico, APHIS announced on Dec. 13 that there will be a release of $165 million in emergency funding to protect U.S. livestock, pets, and wildlife,” Midkiff said.

Setting up a barrier

1944 bulletin from Florida Extension Service features discussion on managing screwworm before the pest was eradicated in the U.S. in 1966 (U of A System Division of Agriculture image by Jon Zawislak)

New World screwworms are endemic to Cuba, Haiti, the Dominican Republic, and countries in South America. Panama was considered the border for screwworm prevalence, but recently the screwworm has trended north into Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras, Guatemala, and the southernmost areas of Mexico.

In 1972, USDA and Mexico started a screwworm eradication program to create a biological barrier distributing sterile flies which disrupt reproduction. The sterile flies were raised in a facility in Mexico and dispersed using specially equipped planes. In 2006, a new sterile fly production facility was built in Panama, with flies distributed along the border between Panama and Columbia, pushing the barrier further south. According to the U.S. Embassy in Costa Rica, an average of 60 million sterile flies were dispersed weekly.

Midkiff said the emergency funds are being used to support surveillance efforts, animal health checkpoints, and collaborate with Mexico and Central American countries to establish a new barrier on the Isthmus of Tehuantepec and re-establish the Panamanian barrier.

Precaution and prevention

Maggie Justice, extension beef cattle specialist for the Division of Agriculture, said she’s been getting questions from ranchers. However, she wants to emphasize that “currently, there is no outbreak in the U.S., we have imposed restrictions on live cattle imports from Mexico out of caution.

“This could cause disruption of the overall cattle supply, especially in regions such as Texas and an overall reduced supply of cattle in the market. This also can cause uncertainty in the market,” Justice said. However, “prevention of the screwworm entering the U.S. is imperative, as there could be major economic losses associated with the pest with devastating consequences for animal health and welfare.”

Economic concerns

The United States imported 1.23 million head of feeder cattle from Mexico in 2024. Mexico is second only to Canada in terms of supplying beef to the U.S.

However, during “the last five weeks of the year, we imported zero,” said James Mitchell, extension livestock economist for the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture. “This is important because we typically observe a seasonal high in Mexican cattle imports during December. These cattle are fed in U.S. feedlots before being processed into beef in preparation for grilling season, which spans from Memorial Day to Labor Day.”

Mitchell said the import ban increased cattle prices, particularly in Texas and other border states.

“However, it also had negative effects on feedlots already struggling to maintain capacity due to tighter domestic cattle supplies,” he said.

The potential cost of a New World screwworm outbreak in domestic herds could be substantial, depending on its severity. Implementing an import ban is a logical step to reduce the risk of such an outbreak. Prior to its eradication in 1966, New World screwworms cost the U.S. livestock industry more than $100 million annually, according to a 1991 presentation by James E. Novy, assistant chief of program evaluations and planning of veterinary services for USDA.

What to look for

New World screwworm flies lay eggs on an open wound or around an orifice, and after a few hours the eggs will hatch and larvae burrow into the wound to feed. The maggots are unique in that they have sharp mouth hooks that cause extensive damage, tearing into the host tissue. Unlike other species, these maggots will only feed on living tissue.

“Being vigilant about New World screwworm is the key to keeping it out of the United States,” Midkiff said.

 Early signs for the screwworm are enlarged or draining wounds, discomfort, and the presence of eggs or larvae near superficial injuries, according to APHIS. Other signs in animals — both mammals and birds — may be irritated behavior, head shaking, the smell of decay, evidence of fly strike, or the presence of maggots in a wound.

“If screwworms are diagnosed, then affected animals will be quarantined until daily wound care and treatments of infected animals are successful,” Midkiff said. “If the USDA investigates cases and it is deemed necessary, then additional control measurements including insecticidal treatment of the environment or sterile screwworm fly release may occur.”

If you suspect a screwworm infestation, contact your veterinarian or state veterinarian.

To learn about extension programs in Arkansas, contact your local Cooperative Extension Service agent or visit www.uaex.uada.edu. Follow us on X and Instagram at @AR_Extension. To learn more about Division of Agriculture research, visit the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station website: https://aaes.uada.edu. Follow on X at @ArkAgResearch. To learn more about the Division of Agriculture, visit https://uada.edu/. Follow us on X at @AgInArk. 

Division of Agriculture releases 2025 versions of weed, pest and disease management guides

LITTLE ROCK — The most widely used publications from the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture have been updated for 2025 with the latest research-based recommendations for managing weeds, disease and pests in row crop agriculture, as well as fruit, vegetable and garden production.

The 2025 publications include:

GUIDES — The University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture's most popular guides have been updated for 2025. UADA design

Copies of guides are available at county extension offices at no charge. Digital copies of the guides, along with other extension publications, are available online at https://www.uaex.uada.edu/publications/new.aspx.

“MP” stands for “miscellaneous publication.” Extension faculty update the guides annually to ensure that Arkansas growers and producers have the most current research-based information when making decisions. The guides are the Division of Agriculture’s most requested publications, with more than 18,500 copies of the guides delivered to county extension offices earlier this month.

“Our comprehensive series on agrichemicals to control weeds, insects, and plant diseases helps put the right options in the hands of farmers, growers and homeowners,” said Shane Gadberry, associate vice president for agriculture and natural resources for the Division of Agriculture. “Information in the guides is supported by trial data and product label information.”

Weed management

MP44, “Recommended Chemicals for Weed and Brush Control,” is the most requested publication and is a must-have resource for anyone using herbicides for weed control in Arkansas.

“New information is included on herbicide-resistant weed species and management practices, as well as an updated map of Palmer amaranth resistance in Arkansas including counties where multiple-resistant populations have been identified,” said Tom Barber, extension weed scientist for the Division of Agriculture. “In addition, information and links for updates on the Endangered Species Act mitigation measures and herbicide strategy are provided.”

MP44’s forage section reflects changes in recommended application timing, said Hannah Wright-Smith, extension weed specialist. “Notable changes include earlier applications of 2,4-D to control buttercup and a recommended fall/ winter application of Rezilon with a Feb. 15 cutoff date.”

The guide’s sections on cotton and soybean sections also have updated, said Bob Scott, extension weed scientist.

“I always recommend that users of these publications throw away their old ones and get the current copy to avoid any off-label or out-of-date recommendations,” Scott said.

Insect management

MP144, “Insecticide Recommendations for Arkansas,” contains information on recommended insecticides in row crops, animal agriculture, fruits, nuts, vegetables and household pests.

Our stored grain section has been expanded to include insecticide performance ratings for many of the recommended products based on research funded by the Arkansas Corn and Grain Sorghum Promotion Board,” said Glenn Studebaker, extension entomologist and integrated pest management coordinator for the Division of Agriculture. “This year we have included a new treatment threshold for tarnished plant bug in ThryvOn cotton varieties.”

“For tarnished plant bug in ThryvOn cotton, the nymph threshold has doubled to six nymphs on five row feet. This is only for cotton with ThryvOn technology,” extension entomologist  Nick Bateman said. “Non-ThryvOn cotton thresholds will continue to be three nymphs on five row feet. Additionally, our rice stink bug threshold in rice was moved to 10 stink bugs on 10 sweeps throughout the whole season. Studies have been conducted for multiple years to confirm these thresholds and will help growers make a more economically sound decision when treating these insects.”

The mobile-friendly edition of MP 144 is available at https://mp144.uada.edu/.

Plant disease management

The “Arkansas Plant Disease Control Products Guide” — or MP 154 — includes a list of fungicides and nematicides registered for use in Arkansas that are used to control diseases of row crops, vegetables, small fruits, turfgrass and ornamental plants.

“All products are registered for use in the state,” said Travis Faske, extension plant pathologist. “Each year new products are added, and fungicide efficacy tables in corn, soybean, and wheat are updated.”

Information in the guide is generated by extension plant pathologists who conduct applied research trials across the state. 

To access more Division of Agriculture publications, visit https://pubs.uada.edu/ or contact your local Cooperative Extension Service agent or visit www.uaex.uada.edu. Follow us on X and Instagram at @AR_Extension. To learn more about Division of Agriculture research, visit the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station website: https://aaes.uark.edu. Follow on X at @ArkAgResearch. To learn more about the Division of Agriculture, visit https://uada.edu/. Follow us on X at @AgInArk.

Attorney General Griffin launches Operation Obscured Vision to fight human trafficking statewide

Griffin: ‘January is National Human Trafficking Prevention Month, and the best way to prevent human trafficking and rescue its victims is to combat it on one of its key fronts: illicit massage parlors’

Attorney General Tim Griffin today issued the following statement announcing the execution of search warrants at 12 locations across the state as part of Operation Obscured Vision to combat human trafficking, resulting in aid provided to 16 victims, the arrest of four individuals, and the seizure of nearly $70,000 and a luxury vehicle:

“January is National Human Trafficking Prevention Month, and the best way to prevent human trafficking and rescue its victims is to combat it on one of its key fronts: illicit massage parlors.

“Operation Obscured Vision was coordinated by my office’s Special Investigations Division and executed by local law enforcement and victim advocates groups to expose the pervasive issue of illicit massage parlors in Arkansas, rescue the victims of human trafficking, and permanently end the presence of illicit massage parlors in our state.

“Many of the women working in these illicit massage parlors are coerced to do so. One victim we interviewed stated that she is forced to work seven days a week, 13 hours per day.

“I am proud to announce that local law enforcement, with coordination by my office, executed 12 search warrants at illicit massage parlors in Jonesboro, Russellville, Hot Springs, Rogers, Harrison, and a Little Rock hotel. I congratulate the local police officers, sheriff’s deputies, the Arkansas State Police, and Special Agents in my office for successfully executing this operation.

“I appreciate the efforts of victim’s advocates and the Arkansas Department of Health, who provided language interpreters, nursing services, and other support to help victims receive comprehensive and coordinated assistance to ensure their safety and support their journey toward independence and recovery. Seventeen victims ranging in age from 29-65 were identified in the operation, sixteen accepted services from medical staff and victim’s advocates.

“I am grateful to members of the Arkansas General Assembly and Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders for their support of adding a full-time human trafficking investigator to my office. That Special Agent worked tirelessly to coordinate this operation, and it wouldn’t have happened without the agent’s efforts.

“This operation is just a first step. The intelligence and evidence obtained through Operation Obscured Vision will be used in ongoing investigations and will aid in targeting similar massage parlors elsewhere in the state. The criminals who run these establishments and the men who patronize them are on notice. We are coming for you, and we will put an end to this horrific practice of exploiting women through human trafficking.”

Four women were arrested as part of Operation Obscured Vision.

  • Haiyan Lu, 54, of Harrison, one count of Promoting Prostitution in the Second Degree

  • Qing Chen, 53, of Jonesboro, one count of Promoting Prostitution in the Second Degree

  • Hongliang Cai, 55, of Jonesboro, one count of Promoting Prostitution in the Second Degree

  • Chunli Wang, 50, of Rogers, one count of Sexual Assault in the Second Degree


Law enforcement seized nearly $70,000 during the operation. Additionally, ¥1,870 in Chinese currency was seized in Russellville. A Mercedes-Benz vehicle was seized in Rogers.

Participating law enforcement agencies in Operation Obscured Vision included:

  • Arkansas Attorney General’s Office Special Investigations Division

  • Arkansas State Police

  • Arkansas State Fusion Center

  • Jonesboro Police Department

  • Harrison Police Department

  • Rogers Police Department

  • Benton County Sheriff’s Office

  • Russellville Police Department

  • Little Rock Police Department

  • Hot Springs Police Department


Prosecuting Attorneys participating in Operation Obscured Vision include:

  • Sonia Hagood, Second Judicial District Prosecuting Attorney

  • Jeff Phillips, Fifth Judicial District Prosecuting Attorney

  • Will Jones, Sixth Judicial Prosecuting Attorney

  • David Ethredge, Fourteenth Judicial District Prosecuting Attorney

  • Michelle Lawrence, Eighteenth-East Judicial District Prosecuting Attorney

  • Bryan Sexton, Nineteenth-West Judicial District Prosecuting Attorney


Advocate groups participating in Operation Obscured Vision included:

  • Arkansas Human Trafficking Council

  • Into the Light

  • Freedom Finders

  • Hope Found

  • NWA Forensic Nursing Team/REACH

  • NWA Sexual Assault Center

  • We Are Free

  • Regional Intervention of Sexual Exploitation (RISE)

  • Children’s Protection Center (CPC) Little Rock

Four-state beef cattle conference to cover herd expansion, cattle markets

By Sarah Cato
U of A System Division of Agriculture

LITTLE ROCK – Extension specialists from Kansas, Oklahoma, Missouri and Arkansas are partnering for the 2025 KOMA Beef Cattle Conference.

MARKET UPDATE – Derrell Peel, Professor of agricultural economics at Oklahoma State University will provide the keynote address at the 2025 KOMA Conference, covering herd expansion and market impacts.

The conference, co-hosted by the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture, Kansas State University, Oklahoma State University and the University of Missouri, is a one-day conference providing research updates from extension specialists, professors and graduate students from all four states. There are two opportunities to attend – Feb. 18 in Parsons, Kansas, and Feb. 19 in Fort Smith, Arkansas. Each will have identical programs.

“We have an exciting lineup this year of expert-led presentations and discussions,” said Maggie Justice, beef production specialist for the Division of Agriculture. “We’ll get the latest update on cutting-edge research in cattle feeding, supplementation, reproduction and more.”

Justice said attendees can expect valuable takeaways on optimizing nutrition, enhancing reproductive efficiency and improving grazing practices.

“With the thin profit margins our producers have been seeing, cattle markets are on everyone’s mind,” Justice said. “A key highlight of the event will be the keynote address from Derrell Peel of Oklahoma State University who will share his expertise on herd expansion and the impact it will have on the market.”

Cost to attend is $20 with lunch included. Those interested in attending in Arkansas can register online. An agenda will be coming soon.

To learn more about Division of Agriculture research, visit the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station website: https://aaes.uada.edu. Follow on Twitter at @ArkAgResearch. To learn more about the Division of Agriculture, visit https://uada.edu/. Follow us on Twitter at @AgInArk. To learn about extension programs in Arkansas, contact your local Cooperative Extension Service agent or visit www.uaex.uada.edu.

Arkansas refugee resettlement disrupted as Trump administration suspends program

Dozens of refugees scheduled to travel to Northwest Arkansas over the next two months had their flights cancelled a week before an executive order was set to go in effect. “We weren’t expecting it–that’s not what the executive order said,” said Joanna Krause. “The impact has been devastating.”

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Joanna Krause is the Executive Director of Canopy NWA, a refugee resettlement agency based in Fayetteville. She spoke with Little Rock Public Radio Friday, at the end of a week she described as “incredibly difficult.”

President Donald Trump halted refugee resettlement in the U.S. with an executive order last Monday, disrupting travel plans for hundreds of refugees recently approved to come to the United States. 11 families assigned to Northwest Arkansas now have no clear path to resettlement.

Arkansas refugee resettlement disrupted as Trump administration suspends program

‘90 for 90’ Graceland exhibit offers new Elvis artifacts

by George Jared (gjared@talkbusiness.net)

It was the moment Gladys and Vernon Presley had been waiting for. She was set to give birth to the couple’s first child in the early morning hours on Jan. 8, 1935. Exuberance turned to horror.

The couple’s first little boy, Jessie, was stillborn. The infant was placed in a box and taken to the kitchen. Vernon and his brother had built the ramshackle house in east Tupelo, Miss., the year before for only $180. It had no running water or electricity.

There was little time to mourn. A second child was on the way. Elvis Aaron Presley was born 35 minutes later. After the death of his brother, Elvis would remain an only child. Gladys and Vernon never had another.

That one child would become one of the greatest musicians and one of the most recognizable cultural icons of all-time.

‘90 for 90’ Graceland exhibit offers new Elvis artifacts

House passes Womack cosponsored bill protecting life

Washington, DC—Congressman Steve Womack (AR-3) last week voted to support H.R. 21, the Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act, legislation he cosponsored to protect the right to life by ensuring that infants born alive after an attempted abortion receive the same standard of care as any other newborn.

Congressman Womack said, “Life is a sacred gift worth protecting. Babies who’ve suffered from an attempted abortion must receive the highest standard of care to have a chance at survival after birth. It’s our moral responsibility. This bill requires healthcare practitioners to administer lifesaving medical care to all babies, regardless of the circumstance. I will continue to fight to protect the vulnerable and the fundamental right to life.”

Details:

  • While federal law establishes that every infant who survives an abortion is considered a person, it does not hold medical professionals responsible when they elect not to help these newborns.

  • H.R. 21 requires that healthcare practitioners who are present at a live birth following an abortion or attempted abortion must provide necessary skill and care to preserve the life and health of the child. After those efforts, the healthcare worker must immediately transport and admit the child to a hospital.

    • Failure to provide this standard of care could result in criminal penalties for an offending healthcare provider, including fines and up to five years in prison.

    • Further, a healthcare practitioner who intentionally kills or attempts to kill an abortion survivor is subject to prosecution for murder.

  • This legislation also bars prosecution of the mother of the child born alive and authorizes mothers of abortion survivors to bring a civil cause of action against a healthcare provider who violates this standard.

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Boozman, Sheehy, Van Hollen introduce Bipartisan Legislation to assist veterans with home ownership

WASHINGTON––U.S. Senators John Boozman (R-AR), Tim Sheehy (R-MT) and Chris Van Hollen (D-MD) introduced the bipartisan VA Home Loan Awareness Act to help more veterans take advantage of the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Home Loan program and achieve home ownership. 

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The VA Home Loan program offers veterans no down payment, no private mortgage insurance and interest rates that are often lower than rates for conventional FHA loans. Despite these benefits, only 13 percent of veterans access the VA Home Loan program. Among veterans who don’t use the VA Home Loan program, 33 percent say they are not aware of the program.

“By making extra effort to inform veterans of the benefits they have earned, we can help the men and women who have served fulfill the American dream of home ownership,” said Boozman. “The VA Home Loan program has been historically underutilized, and I am pleased to see bipartisan support to increase awareness about its potential to help improve the lives of our veterans and their families.”

“For decades, owning a home has been the bedrock of the American Dream, but too often, those who have put their lives on the line for our country have been hampered by a lack of information from their own government. I’m proud to join Senator Van Hollen and my other colleagues in introducing this commonsense measure to empower our veterans with the knowledge and resources necessary to secure a VA Home Loan and achieve the same dream they fought to defend,” said Sheehy.

“After serving our country in uniform, our veterans deserve the support of a grateful nation. The VA Home Loan Program is one way we provide that support – by helping veterans purchase homes. But far too many of our veterans are unaware of this program and what it has to offer. Our bipartisan bill will help ensure more veterans and their families have the opportunity to use it to achieve their goal of homeownership,” said Van Hollen.

The VA Home Loan Awareness Act will help better inform veterans of opportunities provided by the VA Home Loan program by adding a disclosure to the Uniform Residential Loan Application (URLA) informing veterans they may be eligible for a VA Home Loan, directing applicants to consult their lender for more information about the VA Home Loan program, and instructing the Government Accountability Office (GAO) to conduct a review and report to Congress on lenders’ adoption of these URLA updates.

The legislation is also cosponsored by Senators Ted Cruz (R-TX), Raphael Warnock (D-GA), Ted Budd (R-NC), Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI), Bernie Sanders (I-VT), Kevin Cramer (R-ND), Peter Welch (D-VT), Eric Schmitt (R-MO), John Kennedy (R-LA), Thom Tillis (R-NC), Bernie Moreno (R-OH), Jacky Rosen (D-NV) and Amy Klobuchar (D-MN).

Click here to read the text of the legislation.

Worthington wins a Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — A University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture horticulture professor and researcher was recently bestowed the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers.

Margaret Worthington, associate professor of fruit breeding and genetics for the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station, received one of the highest honors given by the United States government following a nomination in association with a blackberry breeding project supported by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture.

PRESIDENTIAL AWARD — Margaret Worthington, associate professor of fruit breeding and genetics, received a Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers. (U of A System Division of Agriculture)

Worthington’s award comes with $250,000 in additional grant funding that she intends to use in hiring a post-doctoral bioinformatics specialist to help in her research. The money will also come in handy, she said, to support her travels back and forth from Fayetteville to the Fruit Research Station in Clarksville.

In addition to teaching courses in the horticulture department for the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences at the University of Arkansas, she is the director of the Arkansas Fruit Breeding Program for the experiment station.

“It’s very exciting to get it,” Worthington said Jan. 15. “It’s a nice honor, and I’m very thankful.”

Worthington is among nearly 400 new PECASE Award honorees. According to a Jan. 14 Biden Administration White House news release, the PECASE Award is “the highest honor bestowed by the U.S. government on outstanding scientists and engineers beginning their independent careers.” The awards are conferred annually at the White House following recommendations from participating federal agencies.

Worthington joined the experiment station, the research arm of the Division of Agriculture, in 2016. She became director of the Fruit Breeding Program in 2023 and was among the international team of scientists that year to assemble the first complete sequence of the blackberry genome,

She is currently also serving as co-director of the $7 million NIFA-grant-supported national effort called “Through the Grapevine: Developing Vitis x Muscadinia Wide Hybrids for Enhanced Disease Resistance and Quality.”

“This PECASE Award demonstrates the national and international value and excellence provided by Dr. Margaret Worthington to fruit breeding, and we are thrilled for her to receive this,” said Mary Savin, professor and head of the horticulture department. “The nomination and receipt of this award highlights Margaret’s capabilities and contributions to horticultural science and research and reinforces that NIFA recognizes — and has recognized — her value to advance fruit science, production and sustainability.”

To learn more about the Division of Agriculture research, visit the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station website. Follow us on X at @ArkAgResearch, subscribe to the Food, Farms and Forests podcast and sign up for our monthly newsletter, the Arkansas Agricultural Research Report. To learn more about the Division of Agriculture, visit uada.edu. Follow us on X at @AgInArk. To learn about extension programs in Arkansas, contact your local Cooperative Extension Service agent or visit uaex.uada.edu.

Executive order puts Bass Reeves loop, other Fort Smith projects in limbo

by Michael Tilley (mtilley@talkbusiness.net)

There is about $40 million in federal grant funds awarded to the City of Fort Smith in limbo following an executive order by President Donald Trump to freeze certain infrastructure funds tied to bipartisan legislation approved by Congress and signed into law.

Trump’s executive order required federal agencies to “immediately pause the disbursement of funds appropriated through the Inflation Reduction Act [IRA] of 2022 … or the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act [IIJA].”

The White House later issued this statement in an attempt to clarify the order: “The directive in section 7 of the Executive Order entitled Unleashing American Energy requires agencies to immediately pause disbursement of funds appropriated under the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-169) or the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (Public Law 117-58).  This pause only applies to funds supporting programs, projects, or activities that may be implicated by the policy established in Section 2 of the order. This interpretation is consistent with section 7’s heading (‘Terminating the Green New Deal’) and its reference to the ‘law and the policy outlined in section 2 of th[e] order.’ For the purposes of implementing section 7 of the Order, funds supporting the ‘Green New Deal’ refer to any appropriations for objectives that contravene the policies established in section 2. Agency heads may disburse funds as they deem necessary after consulting with the Office of Management and Budget.”

Executive order puts Bass Reeves loop, other Fort Smith projects in limbo

Governor Sanders appoints Jerry Halsey to Arkansas State Highway Commission

LITTLE ROCK, Ark.— Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders today announced that she has appointed Jerry Halsey to the Arkansas State Highway Commission. His term expires January 14, 2035. He is replacing Alec Farmer.

“Jerry is an incredibly gifted businessman, a leader in Jonesboro, and most importantly, a great friend. I know his experience in community development in Northeast Arkansas will lend itself to his new role on the Highway Commission and I look forward to working with him to keep Arkansas the center of America’s road, river, and rail systems,” said Governor Sanders.

“I thank Governor Sanders for this opportunity to serve, and for her trust and confidence in me. I am excited and ready to go to work,” said Jerry Halsey.

Jerry Halsey bio:

Jerry L. Halsey, Jr. is the founder, CEO and President of Halsey Thrasher Harpole Real Estate Group, with offices in Jonesboro and Benton. 

Jerry is a graduate of Arkansas State University. He sold real estate through his college career, farmed with his father for a time, and then expanded the family business into real estate. 

Jerry holds a real estate license in multiple states and qualifies for designations based on training and experience. He was inducted into the Northeast Arkansas Board of Realtors Hall of Fame. He currently serves as Vice-Chair of the Arkansas Real Estate Commission and a member of the Board of Directors for the Arkansas State Police Foundation. 

Jerry previously served as a Commissioner for the Arkansas Building Authority, Chairman of the Jonesboro Metropolitan Area Planning Commission, a member of the Jonesboro Vision 2030 comprehensive planning advisory commission, SIOR President for the Arkansas Chapter, and President of the Board of Directors for City Youth Ministries.

The last straw: Broken by low prices, high input costs, some farmers are looking for the exit, extension experts say

By Ryan McGeeney
U of A System Division of Agriculture 

LITTLE ROCK — As the world prepared to celebrate the turn of a new year, extension soybean agronomist Jeremy Ross picked up his phone.  

“One farmer called me on New Year’s Eve to say he was shutting down, and it really surprised me. He had a good yield, but he just couldn’t swing it another year,” Ross said.

HIGH YIELDS, LOW PROFITS — The 2024 growing season presented many reasons to celebrate. Every major row crop in Arkansas, including corn, cotton, soybeans and rice — saw record average yields. Global market trends, however, including production from competing countries, elevated input costs and depressed commodity prices, mean most American growers will see little if any profit. (Division of Agriculture image.)

The 2024 growing season presented many reasons to celebrate. Every major row crop in Arkansas, including corn, cotton, soybeans and rice — saw record average yields.

Global market trends, however, including production from competing countries, elevated input costs and depressed commodity prices, mean most American growers will see little if any profit.

Like nearly every other crop, market prices for soybeans in 2024 failed to keep up with production costs. Per-bushel prices fell to an average of $10.80, a $1.25 decline from forecast prices earlier in the spring. Ross, who works for the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture, said that in the squeeze between market forces, some farmers may be considering leaving the industry.

“There’s still some talk of some people not having a crop in 2025,” Ross said.

“I’ve heard from several others in the same situation,” he said. “And this isn’t just in Arkansas. Talking with my counterparts in other states, they’re hearing the same thing, in the Mid-South and the Midwest.”

Scott Stiles, extension agricultural economist for the Division of Agriculture, agreed that some producers will likely leave agriculture.

“No doubt we’ll see a few more farm auctions this winter,” Stiles said. “The ag lenders say growers have been really slow to come into their office. I think the farmers have been going to their accountant first, and waiting to see what kind of assistance may be coming from Washington.

“The American Relief Act provided some economic help,” he said. “But for soybeans, for example, the expected payment is $29.50 an acre. Cotton might get a payment of $87 per acre. For the majority of growers, these payments aren’t going to bring them to profitability.”

Stiles said the fact that many farmers don’t own the land they farm makes profitability more difficult to achieve.

“If you owned all your farmland, at today’s prices, you might be able to pencil out a profit,” Stiles said. “But the problem is that most growers are tenant farmers. They have to pay a share or some cash rent. In today’s price environment, it takes some really strong yields just to break even.”

Stiles said that, as an example, if a producer is paying a 20 percent share of his crop sales to a landlord, that grower would need to average 62 bushels an acre in soybeans or 235 bushels an acre in corn just to approach profitability.

“You’d have to be exceeding record average yields in everything,” he said.

The National Agricultural Statistics Service, part of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, published its wrap-up of the 2024 growing season earlier this month, its pages replete with record numbers.

Corn

Overall, Arkansas growers planted about 7 million acres of crops in 2024, a decline of about 158,000 acres from the previous year. Corn acreage saw the most dramatic drop in the state, from 850,000 acres planted in 2023 to 500,000 acres planted in 2024. The average yield among those acres, however, tied the state record at 187 bushels an acre. Jason Kelley, extension wheat and feed grains agronomist for the Division of Agriculture, said the crop represented “personal bests” for many growers he spoke with.

“A lot of the growers I visited with felt like it was some of the best corn they’d grown,” Kelley said.

An average market price of $4.20 per bushel, however, marked a continued decline from 2022’s peak price of $6.54 per bushel, making the crop unprofitable for most Arkansas farmers.

“Growers are going through their budgets right now and probably looking for things they can cut out that won’t impact yield,” Kelley said.

Rice 

Arkansas, the country’s No.1 rice-producing state, planted more than 1.44 million acres of the crop in 2024, all but 118,000 acres of it long-grain rice. Growers saw record average yields of 7,640 pounds per acre, producing more than 109 million hundredweight of rice. Jarrod Hardke, extension rice agronomist for the Division of Agriculture, said that while growers managed significant yields despite harsh weather conditions, those same conditions reduced profitability in the end.

“It was the excellent production year we thought it would be,” Hardke said. “Everything pointed to being really close to 2021’s record yield.

“Unfortunately, the hitch for rice was the milling yield component,” he said. “It has a huge effect on the prices growers receive, and how much rice the industry actually has to work with.”

2024 saw widespread early planting from row crop farmers, with a significant portion of the crop in the ground before April 15. Periodic rains between mid-April and June made fertilizing the crop and effectively applying herbicides difficult. The summer then saw an extraordinary string of 100-degree-plus high temperatures, before finally being topped off with the effects of not one but two hurricanes rising from the Gulf of Mexico.

The result of the repeated wetting-and-drying cycles throughout the summer and early fall was reduced milling yields, which represent the amount of whole kernel grains from the overall crop.

“Nobody’s complaining about the yields, but we’re going to have some issues with market demands,” Hardke said. “Whole kernel rice is what has the greatest value. When the milling yields are low, it means our percentage of whole kernels after milling is lower.”

Cotton 

Arkansas cotton acreage jumped more than 27 percent in 2024 to 650,000 acres, a growth rate consistent with the United States cotton industry as a whole. The state also saw a record average yield of 1,313 pounds per acre, for an overall production estimate of 1.75 million bales.

Zachary Treadway, extension cotton and peanut agronomist for the Division of Agriculture, said the high yields speak to the skill of the Arkansas cotton farmer.

“I think those numbers are really a compliment to our producers,” Treadway said. “They didn’t have the easiest of years: a very wet planting season, followed by endless weeks of hot, dry weather, broken by two hurricanes blowing in at the beginning of defoliation. Farming cotton is never easy, but this was a particularly difficult year. To have numbers like that, in a year like this, speaks to how well those growers can manage a crop.”

Nationally, the average estimated cotton yield fell about 7 percent, from 899 pounds per acre to 836.

Cotton prices remained low in 2024, falling from the 2023 average of 79 cents per pound to 76 cents.

“We’re seeing the same prices we were seeing in the 1970s,” Treadway said. “And input prices continue to rise. Even with the good yields, the margins are just super-thin this year.”

Peanuts 

Peanut acreage saw the largest expansion of all Arkansas row crops in 2024 by an order of magnitude, from 35,000 acres in 2023 to 45,000 acres in 2024, according to USDA.

“When you think of Arkansas, you don’t think of peanuts right off the top of your head,” Treadway said. “Seeing the acreages jump in Arkansas, that’s exciting. We’ve got a great group of peanut growers in Arkansas, who are really knowledgeable. They’ve faced some hardships this year, too — the same weather hardships, and other things specific to peanuts.”

While the average Arkansas yield fell from 5,800 pounds per acre to 5,500 pounds, the added acreage brought overall production up considerably, to 242 million pounds. The average market price fell to $510 a ton in 2024 from $530 a ton the previous year.

Soybeans 

Arkansas soybean growers saw record production of more than 166 million bushels, averaging 55 bushels per acre across more than 3 million acres. Ross said that beating the previous record, set in 2023, was astonishing, given the wildly different weather scenarios.

“Everyone did really well in 2023,” he said, “when we had almost ideal weather conditions for soybeans. 2024 was a different story altogether.”

To learn about extension programs in Arkansas, contact your local Cooperative Extension Service agent or visit www.uaex.uada.edu. Follow us on X and Instagram at @AR_Extension. To learn more about Division of Agriculture research, visit the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station website: https://aaes.uada.edu/. Follow on X at @ArkAgResearch. To learn more about the Division of Agriculture, visit https://uada.edu/. Follow us on X at @AgInArk.

‘Gulf of America,’ recall process bills filed

KUAR | By Daniel Breen

An Arkansas lawmaker has filed a proposed constitutional amendment that would allow voters to remove certain public officials from office.

House Joint Resolution 1007, filed by Rep. Frances Cavenaugh, R-Walnut Ridge, would instate a recall process for several state officeholders, including the governor, attorney general and justices of the Arkansas Supreme Court.

The list also extends to the offices of secretary of state, treasurer, land commissioner, state auditor, as well as judges on circuit, district and appellate courts. Prosecutors, county judges, justices of the peace, sheriffs, county clerks, assessors, coroners, county treasurers, county surveyors, tax collectors and constables also fall under the proposal.

‘Gulf of America,’ recall process bills filed

John Sykes/Arkansas Advocate

Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders named a new chair of the state Post-Prison Transfer Board (also known as the parole board) late Wednesday.

Committee rejects bill to allow nonprofit Arkansas hospitals to hold retail pharmacy permits

KUAR | By Tess Vrbin / Arkansas Advocate

From the Arkansas Advocate:

A proposed Arkansas law that would have allowed nonprofit hospitals to hold a retail pharmacy permit narrowly failed in committee Wednesday after more than an hour and a half of discussion and public testimony.

Arkansas is the only state in which the law currently prohibits nonprofit, tax-exempt or governmentally-funded hospitals from holding or acquiring interest in retail pharmacy permits.

Lawmakers have attempted for years to change this via policy proposals that intend to help both hospitals and independently owned pharmacies serve their communities, Sen. Jonathan Dismang, R-Searcy, the lead sponsor of Senate Bill 58, told the Senate Public Health, Welfare and Labor Committee.

Committee rejects bill to allow nonprofit Arkansas hospitals to hold retail pharmacy permits

Mary Hennigan/Arkansas Advocate

Ryan Gehrig (center), president of Mercy Arkansas Hospitals, testifies in favor of a bill that would allow nonprofit hospitals in Arkansas to hold retail pharmacy permits on Wednesday, Jan. 22, 2025. At right is Troy Wells, president and CEO of Baptist Health, who also spoke in favor of the bill before it was voted down by the Senate Public Health, Welfare and Labor Committee.

3 NWA chefs selected as semifinalists for 2025 James Beard Awards

by Talk Business & Politics staff (staff2@talkbusiness.net)

The James Beard Foundation has named three Northwest Arkansas chefs as semifinalists for the 2025 James Beard Awards, the foundation announced Wednesday (Jan. 22). This year marks the 35th anniversary of the James Beard Awards.

Matthew Cooper of Bentonville-based Conifer, Rafael Rios of Bentonville-based Yeyo’s El Alma de Mexico, and Jordan Wright of Johnson-based Wright’s Barbecue are the Arkansas semifinalists in the Best Chef: South category of the 2025 Restaurant and Chef Awards.

The James Beard Awards, which have over 70 categories, recognize exceptional talent in the culinary and food media industries and are considered to be among the nation’s most prestigious honors, the release shows.

3 NWA chefs selected as semifinalists for 2025 James Beard Awards

Boozman Questions VA Secretary Nominee Doug Collins

Nominee Pledges Engagement with Congress, Attention to NW Arkansas Veterans Home Needs

WASHINGTON—U.S. Senator John Boozman (R-AR), a senior member of the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee, questioned President Donald Trump’s nominee for Secretary of the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), former Congressman Doug Collins, and spoke about his current priorities to improve the care and benefits for veterans in Arkansas and across the country. 

Boozman inquired about future support for the VA’s State Veterans Home Program facility in Northwest Arkansas. Specifically, the senator asked Collins to commit to working together to address its needs and eligibility to qualify for grant funding. 

“The VA’s State Veterans Home Program is a great resource for many senior veterans, including those in Arkansas. The [NW Arkansas] location does excellent work caring for senior veterans, but needs upgrades to continue providing the standards of care expected,” said Boozman. “Do I have your commitment that the VA, under your leadership, will be working with us, on the issue?” 

“We are going to work with you and the appropriators, and also this committee, to make sure that the priorities as expressed will be taken care of – and we will work with you to do those as we go forth,” responded Collins. “For me, making sure that the states across this country, and the VA, is providing that care is frankly non-negotiable.” 

Boozman also expressed his concerns to Collins about the VA’s management and budgeting of the Toxic Exposure Fund in light of the implementation of the Sergeant First Class Heath Robinson Honoring Our Promise to Address Comprehensive Toxics (PACT) Act. 

“I am very proud of the committee’s work to pass the PACT Act, which now provides long overdue care for veterans dealing with the effects of toxic exposure,” said Boozman. “How will you make sure the VA’s Toxic Exposure Fund remains viable for years to come while providing the levels of care our veterans have earned?” 

“I think the biggest thing we have to do is, actuarially, look at this past year, and I promise, as I think you and I spoke about this in your office, is [asking] ‘are we at the VA getting good information and doing what the intent of the law was?’ so that they can continue to get those benefits,” said Collins. “And you have a commitment from me that when you get information about how we’re funding and how we are appropriating that, that whoever sits at this table, myself and any other person that comes from the VA will you give you good information and good numbers.” 

The senator concluded by asking Collins to reiterate his commitment to actively communicate with Members of Congress to address issues and provide timely, substantive responses. 

“You served, you were a great member in the House, you understand how important it is that when we need information, when we need to talk to you or somebody of importance, it’s so frustrating,” Boozman stated. “I think one of the most important things that we can talk about today is how important it is again, to be such that you are in constant tune with the members.” 

“Thank you for highlighting what I believe is going to be one of the biggest differences and, if confirmed by this body, at the VA, in the early stages, and that is going to be the involvement of our legislative affairs [team] on this Hill. I am committed to having 535, if you would, canaries in a coal mine – 100 senators and 435 representatives who actually can help us and work together to see where there are problems,” said Collins. “I want to know where the problems are because I am not a secretary, if confirmed, that will sit behind the desk. I will be out and I’ll be there making sure we get it fixed.” 

To watch the senator’s full line of questioning, click here.